The man whom the people elected in 2000 to be president was in the temporary residence of the man whom the Supreme Court anointed.
President George W. Bush hosted former Vice-President Al Gore, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, and five other Nobel laureates, Nov. 26. This annual handshake photo-op has been an American tradition.
The Nobel committee had cited Gore, Oct. 12 , as “probably the single individual who has done most to create greater worldwide understanding of the measures that need to be adopted” to reduce global warming. Gore shared the Nobel Peace Prize with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a UN network of about 2,000 scientists, who have shown that global warming isn’t a liberal conspiracy theory.
Believing that it is some kind of liberal conspiracy theory
are the fringe right-wing who dominate Talk Radio and Pundit TV. The
day after the announcement, Steve Doocy, co-anchor of FOX’s morning
show, set the tone for the rabid-dog attacks. He produced a chart of
past Nobel Peace Prize laureates, including “that crazy Jimmy Carter,”
and claimed the award is nothing more than an “anti-Bush” trophy. On
CNN, guest commentator Marlo Lewis, who was identified as a global
warming expert, called Gore’s writings manipulative, misleading, and
exaggerated. Jay Richards of the National Review
claimed the Peace prize is “politicized.” Rush Limbaugh, who had a
front group nominate him for the Peace Prize only to learn that the
Landmark Legal Foundation had no standing to nominate anyone, was
furious that Gore, not he, received the honor. With the microphone of
more than 600 radio stations that carry his talk show, Limbaugh claimed
his lawyers — the ones at the Landmark group — “are looking into the
possibility of filing an objection with the Nobel Committee over the
unethical tampering for this award that Al Gore is engaging in.” He
claimed, “This is clearly above and beyond the pale. I mean, this might
happen in high school class president elections and so forth, but this
is shameless.”
Bloggers chattered almost endlessly that not
only didn’t Gore deserve the award but also that global warming is a
myth. The Nobel committee, blogged William Teach of Pirate’s Cove, “has
basically surrendered to hysterics, mass exaggerators, and liars.”
Also doubting global warming, and volumes of scientific evidence, is
Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), former chair of the Senate’s Environment and
Public Works Committee, and recipient of one of the largest cumulative
campaign donations from the oil and gas industry. Inhofe has claimed
that there is “compelling evidence” that global warming not only is a
hoax, but that it is “the greatest hoax ever perpetuated on the
American people.”
George H.W. Bush, during his failed re-election campaign in 1992,
called Gore “Ozone Man,” and claimed the vice-presidential candidate
was “so far out in the environmental extreme we’ll be up to our necks
in owls and outta work for every American.”
As for the current President Bush, he delegated the “congratulations”
to a deputy press secretary. Tony Fratto told the media that Bush is
not only “happy for Vice President Gore,” but also happy for the UN
scientists who co-shared the award. “Obviously, it’s an important
recognition, and we’re sure the vice president is thrilled,” said
Fratto, dripping with insincerity.
The Manchester (N.H.) Union Leader, one of the nation’s most conservative newspapers, claimed, “The Nobel Peace Prize is worse than a joke. It's a fraud,” and called the prize a “useless medal.” The Wall Street Journal
didn’t even mention Gore in its editorial the day the Nobel committee
made its announcement, but listed several others who should be
considered for the award. The Journal’s unscientific
poll of its largely conservative upper middle-class and upper class
readers that day revealed that 54 percent didn’t think Al Gore deserved
the Nobel Peace Prize. One reader, reflecting the opinion of about
13,000 who disagreed with the award, called it “a
joke and it encourages the pursuit of junk science for political gain.”
Another reader believed, “The fear being installed from man made global
warming is now officially a communist plot to control behavior.”
However, among the 11,250 who believed the award was justified was one
reader who believed that Al Gore, the former journalist, “did what the
National Academy of Sciences could not do — explain the issue in a way
that non-scientists can understand.”
For more than three
decades, Al Gore has been one of the nation’s strongest voices for the
protection of the environment. His first book, Earth in the Balance (1992),
had pushed protection of the environment onto the national political
agenda; as vice-president, he became the Clinton Administration’s
primary advocate to protect the environment and the nation’s natural
resources.
During the past seven years, Gore co-founded a
major TV cable network (Current TV), which was honored with an Emmy in
2007; wrote the best-selling book about the effects of global warming, An Inconvenient Truth (2006), which was turned into a box office hit that won an Oscar for the best documentary; wrote a best-seller, The Assault on Reason
(2007), which received the Quill Award for history/current
events/politics; and increased his public appearances to speak out
about a number of social issues, including environmental protection.
During the past seven years, George W. Bush spun a nation not only into
a war that has destroyed the environment and natural resources of Iraq,
but had also begun a war in America that is leading to a destruction of
its environment and natural resources. President Bush consistently
ignored the evidence of global warming, and suppressed the views of
government scientists. He allowed Enron and other energy companies to
direct the nation’s energy policy. With a cabinet that includes persons
who either were employed by large oil and coal companies or were paid
lobbyists against environmental protections, he reduced federal
environmental rules. He believes that most of the 250 million acres
under jurisdiction of the Bureau of Land Management should be available
so private industry can strip the resources for their own economic
gain. He has allowed extensive off-shore drilling, increased the
incursion by mining companies, and allowed logging companies to
devastate federal lands. He is a leading advocate for allowing oil
companies to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska,
claiming it’s for “national security,” but completely oblivious to the
reality that such intrusion would severely alter the balance of nature,
while yielding little gas and oil for the American people. He has
permitted gas-spewing recreational vehicles to tear up federal parks
and permanently disturb the wildlife. He reversed himself on a campaign
pledge to reduce acceptable levels of carbon dioxide emissions from
coal-fired power plants, and determined that higher levels of arsenic
and other toxins in drinking water was acceptable. He reduced the
effectiveness of the Environmental Protection Agency, preferring
companies to undergo “voluntary compliance,” and eliminated the tax
upon the oil and chemical industries that paid for the clean up of
SuperFund toxic waste sites. It’s now the taxpayers not polluters who
are paying for clean-up operations.
Within months of his first inaugural, Bush withdrew the United States
from the Kyoto Protocol that called for global environmental protection
by stabilizing greenhouse gas emissions. With Australia about to sign
the Protocol, 173 nations will have signed the agreement; the U.S. is
now the only industrialized nation not to sign.
And now, on a Monday evening after Thanksgiving, President George W.
Bush was meeting with five American Nobel laureates, including Al Gore.
By all accounts, a 40-minute private meeting with Mr. Gore was
“cordial.” The President, after snubbing the former vice-president when
the Nobel committee made its announcement, could now be cordial. He had
personally called Gore to make sure the former vice-president was
available, and was willing to rearrange the White House schedule to
accommodate Mr. Gore. At the post-Thanksgiving ceremony, Bush could
smile and backslap. After all, George W. Bush was president, and
nothing that Al Gore was doing to protect the environment would ever be
enough to erase this president’s political ability to alter the
environment to benefit corporate interests.
Walter M. Brasch is professor of mass communications/journalism at Bloomsburg University. His current book is Sinking the Ship of State: The Presidency of George W. Bush, available through Amazon.com. You may reach Dr. Brasch at www.walterbrasch.com